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Opinion: What American hospitals can learn from India about waste

The first time we stepped into an operating theater in the United States as medical students, we were shocked by the sheer amount of waste produced from just one surgery. In fact, health care is responsible for nearly 10% of total carbon emissions in the United States, contributing approximately 5 million tons annually. Thirty percent of that waste comes from operating rooms, much of it due to disposable gowns, drapes, instruments, and plastic packaging.

As we continued with our medical training, we grew used to the idea that high-quality care inevitably produces high waste. But reading several published articles on the resource efficiency of hospitals in India forced us to question that assumption. How were they providing thousands of surgeries a day with a fraction of the waste — and no compromise in safety?

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The first time we stepped into an operating theater in the United States as medical students, we were shocked by the sheer amount of waste produced from just one surgery. In fact, health care is responsible for nearly 10% of total carbon emissions in the United States, contributing approximately 5 million tons annually. Thirty percent of that waste comes from operating rooms, much of it due to disposable gowns, drapes, instruments, and plastic packaging.

As we continued with our medical training, we grew used to the idea that high-quality care inevitably produces high waste. But reading several published articles on the resource efficiency of hospitals in India forced us to question that assumption. How were they providing thousands of surgeries a day with a fraction of the waste — and no compromise in safety?

Read the rest…

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Amgen shores up Tavneos’ FDA defense with Duke data analysis

Amgen shores up Tavneos’ FDA defense with Duke data analysis

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After the FDA flagged patient deaths linked to Amgen’s rare disease drug Tavneos and called for its voluntary removal, the pharma recruited an independent data analysis from Duke researchers to help build the case for the drug’s continued market approval.​ ​Read More

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Chile offers new data on food warning label efficacy

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So much news today that I didn’t have space to write an item about hot tubs as a breeding ground for Legionnaires’ disease. Here’s the CDC report, if you’re curious.

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Get your daily dose of health and medicine every weekday with STAT’s free newsletter Morning Rounds. Sign up here.

So much news today that I didn’t have space to write an item about hot tubs as a breeding ground for Legionnaires’ disease. Here’s the CDC report, if you’re curious.

Read the rest…

Read More

Continue Reading

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Novartis’ $12B Avidity buy pays dividends with Phase 1/2 muscular dystrophy win

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The RNA-based medicine is one of a handful of antibody-oligonucleotide conjugates that Novartis acquired last October when it took over neuromuscular-focused Avidity Biosciences.

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